Results for '중세 코뮌, 코뮤니즘, 길드, 평의회, 중세도시혁명, medieval Commune, communism, guild, council, medieval urban revolution'

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  1.  15
    The medieval Commune: the historical Origin of the Communism - A socio-philosophical Interpretation of the medieval City.이성백 ) - 2022 - EPOCH AND PHILOSOPHY 33 (3):139-180.
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  2.  25
    Anfänge von Wissenschaft im Kontext der frühmesopotamischen ‘städtischen Revolution’.Jens Høyrup - 1992 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 15 (2):75-97.
    A theme like “town and science” invites to comparative analysis, and suggests questions like these: Is the urban context a particularly fertile soil for the development of scientific thinking? Or rather the contrary? Is it fertile or barren under specific circumstances? Or does it favour a particular kind of scientific activity?General answers to such questions can hardly be found; still, they may provide case studies with a guiding perspective. Case studies, on the other hand, may lead to better understanding (...)
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  3.  10
    Ancient Athenian Democracy, Workers’ Councils, and Leftist Criticism of Stalinist Russia.Vittorio Saldutti - 2022 - Clotho 4 (2):47-67.
    “The political form at last discovered under which to work out the economic emancipation of labor.” With these words, Marx described the Paris Commune of 1871. It “was formed of the municipal councillors, chosen by universal suffrage in the various wards of the town, responsible and revocable at short term […] a working, not a parliamentary body, executive and legislative at the same time.” The political tradition of the Commune was inherited by the Russian soviets and inspired Lenin, who explained (...)
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  4.  15
    Multilinguality and Written Correspondence in the Late Medieval Northern Baltics. Reflections of Literacy and Language in the Communication between the Council of Reval and the Finnish Bailiffs.Tapio Salminen - 1997 - Das Mittelalter 2 (1).
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  5.  17
    Carole Rawcliffe. Urban Bodies: Communal Health in Late Medieval English Towns and Cities. xiii + 431 pp., illus., app., bibl., index. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 2013. $99. [REVIEW]Karl Whittington - 2015 - Isis 106 (1):171-172.
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  6.  27
    Cartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Space by Juan Herrera (review).Aída R. Guhlincozzi - 2023 - Environment, Space, Place 15 (1):139-142.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Cartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Space by Juan HerreraAída R. GuhlincozziCartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Spaceby juan herrera Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2022Juan Herrera’s historical recounting of Latino activism in Fruitvale, California, in Cartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Space is stellar. In fact, the case focused on by Herrera as an example of activism producing (...)
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  7.  15
    Proto-CSR Before the Industrial Revolution: Institutional Experimentation by Medieval Miners’ Guilds.Stefan Hielscher & Bryan W. Husted - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 166 (2):253-269.
    In this paper, we argue that antecedents of modern corporate social responsibility prior to the Industrial Revolution can be referred to as “proto-CSR” to describe a practice that influenced modern CSR, but which is different from its modern counterparts in form and structure. We develop our argument with the history of miners’ guilds in medieval Germany—religious fraternities and secular mutual aid societies. Based on historical data collected by historians and archeologists, we reconstruct a long-term process of pragmatic experimentation (...)
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  8.  10
    The Renewable City: Dawn of an Urban Revolution.Peter Droege - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (2):141-150.
    A vexing modern conundrum is to be solved. The use of oil, gas, and coal is extremely short-lived as a historical phenomenon: a mere blink of an eye at a little more than 1% of total urban history of 10,000 years to-date. Yet current urban civilization is almost entirely based on it. And the fossil-fuel economy poses not only a massive security risk, it also lies at the root of the vast majority of urban sustainability problems. Fresh (...)
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  9.  49
    Revolution without Guarantees: Community and Subjectivity in Nancy, Lingis, Sartre and Levinas.Andrew Ryder - 2012 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (1):115-128.
    Jean-Luc Nancy’s The Inoperative Community, a collection of writings first published in 1985 and 1986, suggests an understanding of community as irreducibly linked to finitude. Alongside this, he advocates a redefinition of the project of revolutionary communism. This endeavor draws equally on the writings on communication of Georges Bataille and the insistence on finitude found in Martin Heidegger. First, we should recapitulate Nancy’s argument in order to determine his presentation of a novel politics as well as the links and disjunctions (...)
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  10.  7
    Jean-Luc Nancy, ontological communism and the revolution of the spirit.Daniel Alvaro - 2025 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 71:142-160.
    This article aims to carry out a historical, philosophical, and political analysis of Jean-Luc Nancy’s conception of communism. To achieve this end, a series of texts by the author, published between 1986 and 2021, are referenced, where the question of communism is approached in relation to themes such as totalitarianism, community, the common, literature, democracy, and capitalist civilization. The paper investigates the development of Nancy’s approach until it reaches its more or less definitive form in the mid-2000s, within the framework (...)
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  11.  19
    Entangled Communisms: Imperial Revolutions in Russia and China.Johann P. Arnason - 2003 - European Journal of Social Theory 6 (3):307-325.
    The idea of entangled modernities is best understood as a complement and corrective to that of `multiple modernities': it serves to theorize the global unity and interconnections of modern socio-cultural formations in a non-reductionist and non-functionalist way. But it can also help to highlight complexity and divergence behind the outwardly uniform or parallel patterns of development. This line of thought seems particularly relevant to the history of Communism. The interdependent but divergent trajectories of the two imperial revolutions, Russian and Chinese, (...)
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  12.  13
    Darko Suvin, Communism, Poetry: Communicating Vessels.Tom Moylan - 2021 - Utopian Studies 32 (2):406-421.
    Darko Suvin's Communism, Poetry: Communicating Vessels teases out the dialectical connection between poetry and revolution. The book is comprised of an amalgam of essays and poems that constitute a “series of epistemological probes.” In their totality, they inform as a book-length essay on the politics of form that focuses on equally revolutionary ways of knowing and being in the terrible world of the present and of anticipating what is to be done to break through the conditions of exploitation and (...)
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  13.  32
    Antonio Gramsci on Surrealism and the Avant-garde.E. San Juan - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (2):31.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.2 (2003) 31-45 [Access article in PDF] Antonio Gramsci on Surrealism and the Avant-garde E. San Juan, Jr. Surrealism provided me with what I had been confusedly searching for. I have accepted it joyfully because in it I have found more of a confirmation than a revelation. It was a weapon that exploded the French language. It shook up absolutely everything....A process of disalienation, (...)
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  14.  25
    The Origin of Cities: Analysis of Words in the Meaning of Settlement in the Qur’ān.Ferruh Kahraman - 2020 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 24 (1):391-413.
    In the Qur’ān the most significant words used to indicate settlement are diyār, qarya, madīna, miṣr and balad. Among these, qarya and madīna are the most important ones. While Qarya means, county, city, urban, land and settlement, madīna means town. Miṣr is used for a city as well as for a specific name of a country. Diyār indicates a geographic border and the places of a settlement, and balad infers a political unity of a number of settlements. Due to (...)
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  15.  8
    Communism, Poetry: Communicating Vessels (Some Insubordinate Essays, 1999–2018) by Darko Suvin (review).Pavla Veselá - 2023 - Utopian Studies 33 (3):531-537.
    Although to the readers of Utopian Studies Darko Suvin remains perhaps best known for his criticism of science fiction, much of his recent writing has fallen into the category of Marxist political epistemology. Of note are In Leviathan's Belly: Essays for a Counter-Revolutionary Time (2012), his analysis of former Yugoslavia in Splendour, Misery, and Potentialities: An X-ray of Socialist Yugoslavia (2017) as well as a number of shorter works on subjects that range from the Russian Revolution to George Orwell's (...)
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  16.  8
    Inside and Outside Monastery Walls. The Relationship of Medieval Czech Mendicants‘ Cloisters and Chapter Houses to their Urban Environment.Martina Kudlíková - 2023 - Convivium 10 (2):46-63.
    Already in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the Minorite and Dominican orders (or Poor Clares and Dominican women) played an important role in town building in terms of religion and social ties, as well as in architecture and urban development. In the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Franciscan Order became important in the same urban environment, contributing with other monasteries to shaping the changing religiosity. This article studies the relationship of Mendicants’ priories – both male and female (...)
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  17.  49
    Antonio Gramsci on Surrealism and the Avant-garde.Epifanio San Juan - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (2):31-45.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.2 (2003) 31-45 [Access article in PDF] Antonio Gramsci on Surrealism and the Avant-garde E. San Juan, Jr. Surrealism provided me with what I had been confusedly searching for. I have accepted it joyfully because in it I have found more of a confirmation than a revelation. It was a weapon that exploded the French language. It shook up absolutely everything....A process of disalienation, (...)
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  18.  19
    Revolution as a transition from empire to nation-state(s): Comparing the Soviet and Chinese paths.Luyang Zhou - 2024 - Thesis Eleven 181 (1):89-112.
    How did revolutions facilitate empires’ transition to nation-states? This article compares the Bolshevik and the Chinese Communist Revolutions. It conceptualizes this Soviet–Sino comparison through three dimensions of nation-building: separating from a universal community, building a national cultural core and overcoming internal ethnopolitics. Both socialist regimes accommodated the nation-state model by fusing centralized control with limited autonomy for ethnic minorities. Yet, whereas the Soviet Union claimed to be a universal union of nation-states, which was supposed to keep accepting new members until (...)
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  19.  15
    Tarnovo Church Council in 1360 and the Bulgarian-Jewish Religious Conflict from 1350ies.Hristo Saldzhiev - 2021 - Filosofiya-Philosophy 30 (1):75-85.
    The article focuses on problems relating to the Jewish community’s origin in medieval Tarnovo, the reasons that provoked the Bulgarian-Jewish conflict from the 1350ies and its aftermaths. The hypothesis that Tarnovo Jews originated from Byzantine and appeared in medieval Bulgarian capital at the end of the 12th century as manufacturers of silk is proposed. The religious clash from the 1350ies is ascribed to the influence exerted by some Talmudic anti-Christian texts on the local Jewish community, to the broken (...)
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  20.  14
    (1 other version)Coming Community.Giorgio Agamben - 1993 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Unquestionably an influential thinker in Italy today, Giorgio Agamben has contributed to some of the most vital philosophical debates of our time. "The Coming Community" is an indispensable addition to the body of his work. How can we conceive a human community that lays no claim to identity - being American, being Muslim, being communist? How can a community be formed of singularities that refuse any criteria of belonging? Agamben draws on an eclectic and exciting set of sources to explore (...)
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  21.  6
    The community of the future.Frederik Vinding Kruse - 1950 - London,: Oxford University Press.
    Excerpt from The Community of the Future Page part 3 the right TO earn. 455 section 1 the development IN economic life and law Introduction 459 A. The development IN urban industries and the influence OF the law 463 Chapter 20. The dissolution of the old industrial organisations, the craft guilds 464 Unrestricted economic freedom of trade 464 I. England and North America 468 II. 496 Chapter 21. The Formations of the New Organisations of Industry and their Struggle for (...)
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  22.  28
    Seeing like a city: how tech became urban.Sharon Zukin - 2020 - Theory and Society 49 (5-6):941-964.
    The emergence of urban tech economies calls attention to the multidimensional spatiality of ecosystems made up of people and organizations that produce new digital technology. Since the economic crisis of 2008, city governments have aggressively pursued economic growth by nurturing these ecosystems. Elected officials create public-private-nonprofit partnerships to build an “innovation complex” of discursive, organizational, and geographical spaces; they aim not only to jump-start economic growth but to remake the city for a new modernity. But it is difficult to (...)
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  23.  7
    “Fetid Breath of Philistines on the Cheek of the Revolution”: Combating the “Petite Bourgeoisie” in the Era of the New Economic Policy.Maria Grafova - 2022 - Sociology of Power 34 (2):138-161.
    Revolutions are started by ardent supporters of radical ideas, often of an almost religious nature, and they are opposed by carriers of opposite, but equally fervent convictions. But for the majority, radical ideas and global transformations are usually of little interest. As soon as the Civil War ended, this majority of the population of Soviet Russia faced the task of adapting to the new peaceful reality of the NEP. One of the actively used terms in the rhetoric of Soviet Russia (...)
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  24.  10
    Communication, Media, and American Society: A Critical Introduction.Daniel W. Rossides - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    What is the role of communication technology and media in making American society more adaptive, equitable, and democratic? Analyzing the field of communication against an in-depth picture of American society, this provocative, wide-ranging text explores how communication enterprises are intrinsically linked to the establishment and maintenance of social power. Throughout the book, changes in communication capabilities are related to changes in wealth and income distribution, the structures of economic organizations, work and the professions, minorities, law and government, urbanization, popular culture, (...)
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  25.  12
    La première révolution politique occidentale?Giles Courtieu - 2020 - Polis 37 (2):290-316.
    Homeric politics have interested scholars for a long time, but their attention has mostly focused on number of major political scenarios: the public assemblies and councils present in the Achaean camp, the agora of Ithaca, or the Trojan court. Yet nothing really decisive ever happens there, except the spread of confusion, despair, pride, and, in the end, either the lack of solution to the political issues variously raised in each case or the reinforcement of the established political order. Very likely (...)
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  26.  35
    Community: The Elusive Unity.Kenneth L. Schmitz - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 37 (2):243 - 264.
    IT is almost a century since Ferdinand Tönnies published his influential work, Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft. In it he drew semantic lines around the conception of "community" that have persisted to this day in much of the literature. He intended his description to be widely applicable, but he drew it chiefly from ancient, medieval, and modern European society up to the present century. Moreover, he circumscribed the terms "community" and "society" by placing them in contrast with one another, binding them (...)
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  27.  20
    Lev Karsavin: Russian Religiosity and Russian Revolution.Alexei A. Kara-Murza - 2022 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 60 (6):441-451.
    This article examines the unique role of Russian intellectual and émigré Lev Platonovich Karsavin (1882–1952) in understanding “Russian communism” as a phenomenon deeply religious in nature. Trained as a historian, specializing in the history of European religiosity, medieval sects, and heresies, the young Karsavin studied the manifold ways in which religious and politics were interwoven. His experience with concrete historical–cultural research helped Karsavin, who became an active figure in Russian Orthodoxy during the First World War, to analyze the origins (...)
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  28.  27
    Communication Opportunities of Civil Society Institutions in Countering the Challenges of Post-Pandemic Postmodernity.Vasyl Marchuk, Liudmyla Pavlova, Hanna Ahafonova, Sergiy Vonsovych & Anna Simonian - 2021 - Postmodern Openings 12 (1Sup1):335-345.
    The modern world space, which is affected by the post-pandemic consequences, is noted by the globalization of society, the increasing role of citizenship in making important state and international decisions has become possible in the context of the information revolution and has its own characteristics of communication in information and communication networks. The importance and need for a thorough study of the chosen topic is that the widespread use of various forms and methods of civil communication, free access of (...)
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  29.  29
    Countrymen and the law in late-medieval Tuscany.Duane J. Osheim - 1989 - Speculum 64 (2):317-337.
    The Curia dei Foretani, or the Court of the Countrymen, of the commune of Lucca was a sort of rural small-claims court. Designed by an urban government to hear minor civil cases which originated in the countryside, it was occupied with the variety of issues that punctuated country life, most especially cases brought by landlords, merchants, and speculators whose living was tied to the rural economy of northwestern Tuscany. The records of the Curia dei Foretani offer an unusual opportunity (...)
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  30.  58
    Concílio Vaticano II, verbalização do sagrado e esfera pública democrática: uma hipótese a partir de Jürgen Habermas (Vatican II Council, sacred verbalization and public spheres: a hypothesis from Jürgen Habermas) - DOI: 10.5752/P.2175-5841.2009v7n15p92. [REVIEW]Sérgio Ricardo Coutinho - 2009 - Horizonte 7 (15):92-109.
    Este artigo visa analisar o processo de recepção do Concílio Vaticano II nas “Igrejas locais” do Maranhão a partir da teoria do agir comunicativo de Jürgen Habermas. A partir de uma questão levantada por José Oscar Beozzo, historiador brasileiro do Concílio Vaticano II, queremos saber de que modo áreas relativamente periféricas para a gestação e produção do Concílio aprestaram-se para a sua recepção e a realizaram à sua maneira. O tema se torna interessante porque foram justamente nessas áreas relativamente marginais (...)
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  31.  48
    The Sacred and the Myth: Havel's Greengrocer and the Transformation of Ideology in Communist Czechoslovakia.Marci Shore - 1996 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 3 (1):163-182.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Sacred and the Myth: Havel's Greengrocer and the Transformation of Ideology in Communist Czechoslovakia Marci Shore University ofToronto There is nothing a free man is so anxious to do as to find something to worship. But it must be something unquestionable, that all men can agree to worship communally. For the great concern ofthese miserable creatures is not that every individual should find something to worship that he (...)
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  32.  18
    Sociocultural problems of polycentric urban development in the context of urbanization.Mariya Alanovna Khasieva - 2022 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 3:1-8.
    The article examines the cultural and philosophical and socio-philosophical significance of polycentric urban planning strategies in the framework of the historical process of urbanization. Network and polycentric urban planning began to develop in the 19th century, was associated with a new course for the conscious and planned development of cities and assumed an even distribution of public facilities and communications, the unification of urban space with connecting axes, the integration of transport and engineering infrastructure. These trends in (...)
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  33.  12
    Science and Politics During the Cold War – The Controversial Case of Sexology in Communist Romania.Luciana Jinga - 2018 - History of Communism in Europe 9:87-107.
    The paper investigates how formal/informal networks of scientists, while facilitating the scientific West-East transfer in the Cold War context, shaped the scientific field of sexology by imposing personal scientific credos, in a particular national context. The paper shows that in the Cold War context, sexual science was present in Communist Romania, but neither as imitation of the regional scholarship, nor as a simple reproduction of western advancements in the field. The post-war Romanian scholarship in the field of sexology was the (...)
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  34. Placing the food system on the urban agenda: The role of municipal institutions in food systems planning. [REVIEW]Kameshwari Pothukuchi & Jerome L. Kaufman - 1999 - Agriculture and Human Values 16 (2):213-224.
    Food issues are generally regarded as agricultural and rural issues. The urban food system is less visible than such other systems as transportation, housing, employment, or even the environment. The reasons for its low visibility include the historic process by which issues and policies came to be defined as urban; the spread of processing, refrigeration, and transportation technology together with cheap, abundant energy that rendered invisible the loss of farmland around older cities; and the continuing institutional separation of (...)
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  35.  8
    Dividuum: machinic capitalism and molecular revolution.Gerald Raunig - 2016 - South Pasadena, CA: Semiotext(e). Edited by Aileen Derieg.
    Raunig develops a philosophy of dividuality as a way of addressing contemporary modes of production and forms of life. The animal of the molecular revolution will be neither mole nor snake, but a drone-animal-thing that is solid, liquid, and a gas. —from Dividuum As the philosophical, religious, and historical systems that have produced the “individual” (and its counterparts, society and community) over the years continue to break down, the age of “dividuality” is now upon us. The roots of the (...)
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  36. ‘Less Mudslinging and More Facts’: A New Look at an Old Debate about Public Health in Late Medieval English Towns.Carole Rawcliffe - 2012 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 89 (1):203-221.
    Many current assumptions about health provision in medieval English cities derive not from the surviving archival or archaeological evidence but from the pronouncements of Victorian sanitary reformers whose belief in scientific progress made them dismissive of earlier attempts to ameliorate the quality of urban life. Our own tendency to judge historical responses to disease by the exacting standards of modern biomedicine reflects the same anachronistic attitude, while a widespread conviction that England lagged centuries behind Italy in matters of (...)
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  37.  28
    The Construction of a New Form of Learning and Practing Medicine in Medieval Latin Europe.Luis García-Ballester - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (1):75-102.
    The ArgumentIn this paper I try to analyze the fate of a new medical model that was developed in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in European Latin society, particularly in the southern parts of Latin Europe. This model won the approval of the communities in which it was developed as part of an incipient network of medical care and attention. The new healer (Christian and male )that emerged from this model, whether physician or surgeon, based his practice on his knowledge (...)
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  38.  25
    Draft for Understanding the Historical Background of Changes in the Ideological Language and Communication of Secret Services in 20th Century’s Hungary.Bela Revesz - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 33 (3):855-898.
    Words can mean different things to different people. This can be problematic, mainly for those working together in a bureaucratic institution, such as the secret service. Shared, certified, explicit and codified definitions offer a counter to subjective, solitary and/or culturally dominant definitions. It’s true that codified secrecy terms for secret services can be seen to involve a number of political, cultural, subcultural “languages”, but if words come from unclassified or declassified files, memorandums and/or records, one needs a deep understanding of (...)
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  39.  44
    The true citizens of the city of God: the cult of saints, the Catholic social order, and the urban Reformation in Germany.Steven Pfaff - 2013 - Theory and Society 42 (2):189-218.
    Historical scholarship suggests that a robust cult of the saints may have helped some European regions to resist inroads by Protestantism. Based on a neo-Durkheimian theory of rituals and social order, I propose that locally based cults of the saints that included public veneration lowered the odds that Protestantism would displace Catholicism in sixteenth-century German cities. To evaluate this proposition, I first turn to historical and theoretical reflection on the role of the cult of the saints in late medieval (...)
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  40.  15
    La vérité: Vérité et crédibilité: construire la vérité dans le système de communication de l'Occident (XIIIe-XVIIe siècle): Actes de la conférence organisée à Rome en 2012 par SAS en collaboration avec l'École française de Rome.Jean-Philippe Genêt (ed.) - 2015 - Roma: École française de Rome.
    Signs and States, programme financé par l'ERG (European Research Council), a pour but d'explorer la sémiologie de l'Etat du XIIIe siècle au milieu du XVIIe siècle. Textes, performances, images, liturgies, sons et musiques, architectures, structures spatiales, tout ce qui contribue à la communication des sociétés politiques, tout ce qu'exprime l'idéel des individus et leur imaginaire, est ici passé au crible dans trois séries de rencontres dont les actes ont été rassemblés dans une collection, Le pouvoir symbolique en Occident (1300-1640). Ces (...)
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  41.  81
    Rhetoric, Reflection, and Emancipation: Farrell and Habermas on the Critical Studies of Communication.G. Thomas Goodnight - 2008 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 41 (4):421-439.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Rhetoric, Reflection, and Emancipation: Farrell and Habermas on the Critical Studies of CommunicationG. Thomas GoodnightThere are moments in history that appear to be alive with emancipatory possibilities. Such were the years moving toward the end of the long twentieth century. In spring 1989, students protested the communist regime in China; the Tiananmen Square massacre initiated an episode of opposition and commenced China’s modern journey toward global reengagement. Revolutions in (...)
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  42.  31
    Liang Shuming’s China : the Country of Reason (1967-1970) : revolution, religion, and ethnicity in the reinvention of the Confucian tradition.Ady Van den Stock - 2020 - International Communication of Chinese Culture 7:603–620.
    Liang Shuming’s 梁漱溟 China: the Country of Reason is a little-known, posthumously published manuscript composed between 1967 and 1970 during the Cultural Revolution. It offers a unique perspective on Liang’s philosophical attempt to reconcile the Communist revolutionary legacy with the Confucian tradition that he continued to uphold in mainland China after the founding of the People’s Republic. By presenting and analyzing the main themes and concepts of this book, I try to cast some light on Liang’s idiosyncratic repurposing of (...)
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  43.  7
    Unless You Believe, You Shall Not Understand: Logic, University, and Society in Late Medieval Vienna.Michael H. Shank - 2014 - Princeton Legacy Library.
    Founded in 1365, not long after the Great Plague ravaged Europe, the University of Vienna was revitalized in 1384 by prominent theologians displaced from Paris--among them Henry of Langenstein. Beginning with the 1384 revival, Michael Shank explores the history of the university and its ties with European intellectual life and the city of Vienna. In so doing he links the abstract discussions of university theologians with the burning of John Hus and Jerome of Prague at the Council of Constance (1415-16) (...)
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  44.  19
    Coins of Little Value in Old French Literature.Urban T. Holmes Jr - 1957 - Mediaeval Studies 19 (1):123-128.
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  45.  49
    The Role of Intellectuals in the Reconciliation Processes in Post-Communist Latvia.Juris Rozenvalds - 2001 - Social Philosophy Today 17:275-285.
    The role of intellectuals in the reconciliation between Latvians and Russians in postcommunist Latvia is analysed in the context of the traditional philosophicalproblem of the social role of philosophers and based on the ideas of Plato, Kant and Foucault. In accordance with Kant's understanding of the political role of philosophers, the main political functions of the intellectuals a repointed out. Despite the important role played by Latvian intellectuals in the so-called "singing revolution," they did not fullill their critical potential (...)
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  46. Collective Images of the West in Postcommunist Countries and the Process of Enlargement of Community Space.Artan Fuga - 2002 - Diogenes 49 (194):58-65.
    The fall of the Communist regimes in the countries of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, and their commitment to social, political and economic reform, represent two aspects of a deep process of social transformation. As in all socio-political transformation which overturns the previous political and economic order, this process needed to develop an ideology and a concrete image of the future in order to mobilize their populations, to invent that certain political rationality which is indispensable for bringing reform to (...)
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  47.  52
    “Pro bono pacis”: Crime, Conflict, and Dispute Resolution. The Evidence of Notarial Peace Contracts in Late Medieval Florence.Katherine L. Jansen - 2013 - Speculum 88 (2):427-456.
    One day in the year 1274, Giuntino Jacobi appeared at the church of Santo Stefano in Quarrata. According to the notarial contract in the register of Ildebrandino d'Accatto, Giuntino was already seething with rage when he arrived at the sanctuary. When he then tried to force his way into the church, the presbyter Donato refused him access by slamming the door in his face. There is little doubt that Donato felt threatened, as he very quickly set about raising the hue (...)
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  48.  24
    Ethics in Internet (Document).Pontifical Council for Social Communication - 2020 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 32 (1-2):179-192.
    Today, the earth is an interconnected globe humming with electronic transmissions-a chattering planet nestled in the provident silence of space. The ethical question is whether this is contributing to authentic human development and helping individuals and peoples to be true to their transcendent destiny. The new media are powerful tools for education, cultural enrichment, commercial activity, political participation, intercultural dialogue and understanding. They also can serve the cause of religion. Yet the new information technology needs to be informed and guided (...)
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  49.  14
    Apocalypse and/or Metamorphosis.Norman Oliver Brown - 1991 - University of California Press.
    Here is the final volume of Norman O. Brown's trilogy on civilization and its discontents, on humanity's long struggle to master its instincts and the perils that attend that denial of human nature. Following on his famous books _Life Against Death_ and _Love's Body_, this collection of eleven essays brings Brown's thinking up to 1990 and the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe. Brown writes that "the prophetic tradition is an attempt to give direction to the social structure precipitated by (...)
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  50.  11
    Connecting Formal Science Classroom Learning to Community, Culture and Context in India.Sameer Honwad, Erica Jablonski, Eleanor Abrams, Michael Middleton, Ian Hanley, Elaine Marhefka, Claes Thelemarck, Robert Eckert & Ruth Varner - 2019 - In Rekha Koul, Geeta Verma & Vanashri Nargund-Joshi (eds.), Science Education in India: Philosophical, Historical, and Contemporary Conversations. Springer Singapore. pp. 143-162.
    The perception of separation between school and home/community is related to diminished achievement in school and lack of motivation to learn STEM subjects. The National Council of Educational Research and Training is among many research organisations that have strongly recommended that schools bridge the disconnect between school-based knowledge and learners’ everyday knowledge. We designed the SPIRALS curriculum to bridge this gap between formal science and students’ everyday lives. SPIRALS helps students explore community-based practices to learn about science, environmental sustainability and (...)
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